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Men And Women Are Different
Hara Estroff Marano
Vancouver
Sun
Saturday, April 10, 2004
Get out the spittoon. Men produce twice as
much saliva as women. Women, for their part, learn to speak earlier, know more
words, recall them better, pause less and glide through tongue twisters.
__________
Put aside Simone de Beauvoir's famous dictum,
"One is not born a woman but rather becomes one." Science suggests
otherwise, and it's driving a whole new view of who and what we are.
Males and females, it turns out, are different
from the moment of conception, and the difference shows itself in every system
of body and brain.
It's safe to talk about sex differences again.
Of course, it's the oldest story in the world. And the newest. But for a while
it was also the most treacherous. Now it may be the most urgent.
The next stage of progress against disorders
as disabling as depression and heart disease rests on cracking the binary code
of biology. Most common conditions are marked by pronounced gender differences
in incidence or appearance.
Although sex differences in brain and body
take their inspiration from the central agenda of reproduction, they don't end
there. "We've practised medicine as though only a woman's breasts, uterus
and ovaries made her unique -- and as though her heart, brain and every other
part of her body were identical to those of a man," says Dr. Marianne
Legato, a cardiologist at Columbia University who heads the new push on gender
differences. Legato notes that women live longer but break down more.
Do we need to explain that difference doesn't
imply superiority or inferiority?
Although sex differences may provide
ammunition for David Letterman or the Simpsons, they unfold in the most private
recesses of our lives, surreptitiously moulding our responses to everything from
stress to space to speech. Yet there are some ways the sexes are becoming more
alike -- they are now both engaging in the same kind of infidelity, one that is
equally threatening to their marriages.
Everyone gains from the new imperative to
explore sex differences. When we know why depression favours women two to one,
or why the symptoms of heart disease literally hit women in the gut, it will
change our understanding of how our bodies and our minds work.
Whatever sets men and women apart, it all
starts with a single chromosome: The male-making Y, a puny thread bearing a
paltry 25 genes, compared with the lavish female X, studded with 1,000 to 1,500
genes.
But the Y guy trumps. He has a gene dubbed Sry,
which, if all goes well, instigates an Olympic relay of development. It commands
primitive fetal tissue to become testes, and they then spread word of
masculinity out to the provinces via their chief product, testosterone. The
circulating hormone not only masculinizes the body but affects the developing
brain, influencing the size of specific structures and the wiring of nerve
cells.
But sex genes themselves don't cede everything
to hormones. Over the past few years, scientists have come to believe that they
also play roles in gender-flavouring the brain and in behaviour.
Females, it turns out, appear to have backup
genes that protect their brains from big trouble. To level the genetic playing
field between men and women, nature normally shuts off one of the two X
chromosomes in every cell in females. But about 19 percent of genes escape
inactivation; cells get a double dose of some X genes.
Having fallback genes may explain why females
are far less subject than males to mental disorders from autism to
schizophrenia.
What's more, which X gene of a pair is
inactivated makes a difference in the way female and male brains respond to
things, says neurophysiologist Arthur Arnold of the University of California at
Los Angeles. In some cases, the X gene donated by Dad is nullified; in other
cases it's the X from Mom. The parent from whom a woman gets her working genes
determines how robust her genes are. Paternal genes ramp up the genetic volume,
maternal genes tune it down. This is known as genomic imprinting of the
chromosome.
For many functions, it doesn't matter which
sex genes you have or from whom you get them. But the Y chromosome itself spurs
the brain to grow extra dopamine neurons, Arnold says. These nerve cells are
involved in reward and motivation, and dopamine release underlies the pleasure
of addiction and novelty-seeking. Dopamine neurons also affect motor skills and
go awry in Parkinson's disease, a disorder that afflicts twice as many males as
females.
XY makeup also boosts the density of
vasopressin fibers in the brain. Vasopressin is a hormone that both abets and
minimizes sex differences; in some circuits it fosters parental behaviour in
males; in others it may spur aggression.
Ruben Gur always wanted to do the kind of
psychological research that, when he found something new, no one could say his
grandmother already knew it. Well, "My grandmother couldn't tell you that
women have a higher percentage of grey matter in their brains," he says.
Nor could she explain how that discovery resolves a long-standing puzzle.
Gur's discovery that females have about 15 to
20 per cent more grey matter than males suddenly made sense of another major sex
difference: Men, overall, have larger brains than women (their heads and bodies
are larger), but the sexes score equally well on tests of intelligence.
Grey matter, made up of the bodies of nerve
cells and their connecting dendrites, is where the brain's heavy lifting is
done. The female brain is more densely packed with neurons and dendrites,
providing concentrated processing power -- and more thought-linking capability.
The larger male cranium is filled with more
white matter and cerebrospinal fluid. "That fluid is probably
helpful," says Gur, director of the Brain Behavior Laboratory at the
University of Pennsylvania. "It cushions the brain, and men are more likely
to get their heads banged about."
White matter, made of the long arms of neurons
encased in a protective film of fat, helps distribute processing throughout the
brain. It gives males superiority at spatial reasoning. White matter also
carries fibers that inhibit "information spread" in the cortex. That
allows a single-mindedness that spatial problems require, especially difficult
ones. The harder a spatial task, Gur finds, the more circumscribed the
right-sided brain activation in males, but not in females. The white matter
advantage of males, he believes, suppresses activation of areas that could
interfere with work.
The white matter in women's brains is
concentrated in the corpus callosum, which links the brain's hemispheres, and
enables the right side of the brain to pitch in on language tasks. The more
difficult the verbal task, the more global the neural participation required --
a response that's stronger in females.
Women have another heady advantage -- faster
blood flow to the brain, which offsets the cognitive effects of aging.
Men lose more brain tissue with age,
especially in the left frontal cortex, the part of the brain that thinks about
consequences and provides self-control.
"You can see the tissue loss by age 45,
and that may explain why midlife crisis is harder on men," Gur says.
"Men have the same impulses but they lose the ability to consider long-term
consequences." Now, there's a fact someone's grandmother may have figured
out already.
The difference between the sexes may boil down
to this: Dividing the tasks of processing experience. Male and female minds are
innately drawn to different aspects of the world around them. And there's new
evidence that testosterone may be calling some surprising shots.
Women's perceptual skills are oriented to
quick -- call it intuitive -- people reading. Females are gifted at detecting
the feelings and thoughts of others, inferring intentions, absorbing contextual
clues and responding in emotionally appropriate ways. They empathize. Tuned to
others, they more readily see alternate sides of an argument. Such empathy
fosters communication and primes females for attachment.
Women, in other words, seem to be hard-wired
for a top-down, big-picture take. Men might be programmed to look at things from
the bottom up (no surprise there.)
Men focus first on minute detail, and operate
most easily with a certain detachment. They construct rules-based analyses of
the natural world, inanimate objects and events. In the coinage of Cambridge
University psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen, they systemize.
The superiority of males at spatial cognition
and females' talent for language probably subserve the more basic difference of
systemizing versus empathizing. The two mental styles manifest in the toys kids
prefer (humanlike dolls versus mechanical trucks); verbal impatience in males
(ordering rather than negotiating); and navigation (women personalize space by
finding landmarks; men see a geometric system, taking directional cues in the
layout of routes).
Almost everyone has some mix of both types of
skills, although males and females differ in the degree to which one set
predominates, contends Baron-Cohen. In his work as director of Cambridge's
Autism Research Centre, he finds that children and adults with autism, and its
less severe variant Asperger syndrome, are unusual in both dimensions of
perception. Its victims are "mindblind," unable to recognize people's
feelings. They also have a peculiar talent for systemizing, obsessively focusing
on, say, light switches or sink faucets.
Autism overwhelmingly strikes males; the ratio
is 10 to one for Asperger. In his new book, The Essential Difference: The Truth
About the Male and Female Brain, Baron-Cohen argues that autism is a magnifying
mirror of maleness.
The brain basis of empathizing and systemizing
is not well understood, although there seems to be a "social brain,"
nerve circuitry dedicated to person perception. Its key components lie on the
left side of the brain, along with language centres generally more developed in
females.
Baron-Cohen's work supports a view that
neuroscientists have flirted with for years: Early in development, the male
hormone testosterone slows the growth of the brain's left hemisphere and
accelerates growth of the right.
Testosterone may even have a profound
influence on eye contact. Baron-Cohen's team filmed year-old children at play
and measured the amount of eye contact they made with their mothers, all of whom
had undergone amniocentesis during pregnancy. The researchers looked at various
social factors -- birth order, parental education, among others -- as well as
the level of testosterone the child had been exposed to in fetal life.
Baron-Cohen was "bowled over" by the
results. The more testosterone the children had been exposed to in the womb, the
less able they were to make eye contact at the age of one.
"Who would have thought that a behaviour
like eye contact, which is so intrinsically social, could be in part shaped by a
biological factor?" he asks. What's more, the testosterone level during
fetal life also influenced language skills. The higher the prenatal testosterone
level, the smaller a child's vocabulary at 18 months and again at 24 months.
Lack of eye contact and poor language aptitude
are early hallmarks of autism. "Being strongly attracted to systems,
together with a lack of empathy, may be the core characteristics of individuals
on the autistic spectrum," Baron-Cohen says. "Maybe testosterone does
more than affect spatial ability and language. Maybe it also affects social
ability." And perhaps autism represents an "extreme form" of the
male brain.
This year, 19 million Americans will suffer a
serious depression. Two out of three will be female. Over the course of their
lives, 21.3 per cent of women and 12.7 per cent of men experience at least one
bout of major depression.
The female preponderance in depression is
virtually universal. And it's specific to unipolar depression. Males and females
suffer equally from bipolar, or manic, depression. However, once depression
occurs, the clinical course is identical in men and women.
The gender difference in susceptibility to
depression emerges at 13. Before that age, boys, if anything, are a bit more
likely than girls to be depressed. The gender difference seems to wind down four
decades later, making depression mostly a disorder of women in the child-bearing
years.
As director of the Virginia Institute for
Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics at Virginia Commonwealth University, Dr.
Kenneth Kendler presides over "the best natural experiment that God has
given us to study gender differences" -- thousands of pairs of opposite-sex
twins. He finds a significant difference between men and women in their response
to low levels of adversity. He says, "Women have the capacity to be
precipitated into depressive episodes at lower levels of stress."
Adding injury to insult, women's bodies
respond to stress differently than do men's. They pour out higher levels of
stress hormones and fail to shut off production readily. The female sex hormone
progesterone blocks the normal ability of the stress hormone system to turn
itself off. Sustained exposure to stress hormones kills brain cells, especially
in the hippocampus, which is crucial to memory.
It's bad enough that females are set up
biologically to internally amplify their negative life experiences. They are
prone to it psychologically as well, finds University of Michigan psychologist
Susan Nolen-Hoeksema.
Women ruminate over upsetting situations,
going over and over negative thoughts and feelings, especially if they have to
do with relationships. Too often they get caught in downward spirals of
hopelessness and despair.
It's entirely possible that women are
biologically primed to be highly sensitive to relationships. Eons ago it might
have helped alert them to the possibility of abandonment while they were busy
raising the children.
Today, however, there's a clear downside.
Ruminators are unpleasant to be around, with their oversize need for
reassurance. Of course, men have their own ways of inadvertently fending off
people. As pronounced as the female tilt to depression is the male excess of
alcoholism, drug abuse and antisocial behaviors.
Nothing unites men and women better than sex.
Yet nothing divides us more, either. Males and females differ most in mating
psychology because our minds are shaped by and for our reproductive mandates.
That sets up men for sex on the side and a more casual attitude toward it.
Twenty-five per cent of wives and 44 per cent
of husbands have had extramarital intercourse, reports Baltimore psychologist
Shirley Glass.
Traditionally for men, love is one thing and
sex is . . . well, sex.
In what may be a shift of epic proportions,
sexual infidelity is mutating before our very eyes. Increasingly, men as well as
women are forming deep emotional attachments before they even slip into an
extramarital bed together. It often happens as they work long hours together in
the office.
"The sex differences in infidelity are
disappearing," says Glass, the doyenne of infidelity research.
"In my original 1980 study, there was a
high proportion of men who had intercourse with almost no emotional involvement
at all -- non-relational sex. Today, more men are getting emotionally
involved."
One consequence of the growing parity in
affairs is greater devastation of the betrayed spouse. The old strictly sexual
affair never affected men's marital satisfaction. "You could be in a good
marriage and still cheat," reports Glass.
Liaisons born of the new infidelity are much
more disruptive -- much more likely to end in divorce. "You can move away
from just a sexual relationship but it's very difficult to break an
attachment," says Rutgers University anthropologist Helen Fisher. "The
betrayed partner can probably provide more exciting sex but not a different kind
of friendship."
It's not that today's adulterers start out
unhappy or looking for love. Says Glass: "The work relationship becomes so
rich and the stuff at home is pressurized and child-centred. People get involved
insidiously without planning to betray."
Any way it happens, the combined
sexual-emotional affair delivers a fatal blow not just to marriages but to the
traditional male code.
"The double standard for adultery is
disappearing," Fisher emphasizes.
"It's been around for 5,000 years and
it's changing in our lifetime. It's quite striking. Men used to feel that they
had the right. They don't feel that any more."
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